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Peter Weston's columns of fannish commentary and fanzine reviews for the British Science Fiction Association's journal VECTOR, written under the pseudonym 'Malcolm Edwards'. Now reproduced on Greg Pickersgill's site.

Jim Linwood's site on the
British SF magazine edited by Peter Hamilton. Lots of information
on fan contributions, letters, artwork, etc., scans of all the covers, and a complete archive of Ken Slater's book review columns.

The Canadian Fancyclopedia—the result of 15 years research by R. Graeme Cameron into the history of Canadian Science Fiction Fandom— details Canadian conventions, clubs, organizations, fanzines, prominent fanzine editors, APAzines, culture and traditions, as well as international fannish lore. To be updated as research continues.

Take a great fanwriter and make him Fan Guest of Honour at Interaction, the 2005 Worldcon in Glasgow. Then set Claire Brialey and Mark Plummer loose in the fanzine archives. You end up with this excellent collection of Greg Pickersgill's writings, now available for the first time on line.

"A gift
to Las Vegas Fandom from their friends in mossy Seattle, on the occasion
of Corflu Blackjack, March 19th to 21st, 2004."
A fanthology of Las Vegas fan writing edited by Andy Hooper for the Las
Vegas Corflu.

In which Greg begins "a
project to reprint most of the material I have written for science fiction
fanzines or for sf-fan email mailing lists since I encountered science fiction
fandom in 1967." New material, July 2003

Not to be confused with the American SF book club, the UK version began in 1953 and issued many important titles. Greg Pickersgill is compiling a web archive on the Club, and welcomes information and contributions.

Faan fiction by Arnie Katz,
who notes: "Once in every fan generation a story comes
along that is so gripping, yet ultimately transcendental, that it is a "must
read" for all fans able to do so. While we're waiting for that one,
I thought you might like to take a look at my faan fiction opus, The
Science Fiction League of Extraordinary Fuggheads."

Peter Weston was fan guest of honor
at Worldcon 2004, Noreascon 4 in Boston, and to mark the occasion NESFA
Press published his book of fannish history, appropriately subtitled
"My
Adventures in British Fandom".

Much
more than a plain recitation of fan history facts, it is at once an autobiography
and a document of social commentary on the 1960s and 70s in Britain. Of
course as soon as the book was published the amendments and additions
started arriving, so Peter and I have created a Supplement for all the
additional material, hosted here on eFanzines.com

edited by Eileen Gunn - a webzine featuring new science fiction by major writers, reviews by respected critics, and essays by original thinkers. It is kind of monthly, kind of weekly, and kind of daily.

Fancyclopedia II, based on Jack Speer's earlier Fancyclopedia, was published
in 1959 by Dick Eney, and was available on line at Eney's site until his recent death.Fancyclopedia 3 is intended to be a collective enterprise of all of fandom. Based on the previous works, it is to be written by fans who want to contribute. See the website for full details.

If you're a fanzine fan, you probably
know about the various fan funds which send worthy fans (who will, it is
hoped, publish a trip report) to conventions in foreign lands. For information on current races, candidate platforms,
and ballot forms, click on the links below.

Fanac.org's Joe Siclari served as the North American delegate to the 2005 Australian National SF Convention in Hobart, Tasmania

TAFF
- The Trans-Atlantic Fan Fund - TAFF now its own (unofficial) website with news and details of the current race and much historical information compiled by Dave Langford. The site also has information on DUFF and GUFF. Nominations are now open for the 2010 race to send a North American fan to the British Eastercon, Orbital.Full details and nomination form (83KB PDF), or visit the TAFF site.

Click
here for photos from the TAFF party for Randy Byers in Walthamstow, England, 12 April
2003.

Frank R. Paul - Frank Wu's site dedicated to the work of the prolific science fiction and fantasy artist

Rotsler.com - Michael Bernstein's site dedicated to the work of Bill Rotsler

The Rotsler Award website - awards for long-time wonder-working with graphic art in amateur publications of the science fiction community.

the SF Hub
- Liverpool University's subject portal for science fiction scholars is based on the wealth of research resources in the Science Fiction Collections of The University of Liverpool's Special Collections and Archives. The SF Hub aims to facilitate research into science fiction and its related literary genres.

Space is available
on this site for any editor who wants to put an SF fanzine on line,
in HTML, PDF, or any other standard format. There is no charge to
editors or readers.

I'm also happy to list
other on-line SF fanzine sites.
Please let me know if you'd like a link.